Trump kickstarts week two

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POLITICO Playbook PM

By Bethany Irvine

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THE CATCH-UP

President Donald Trump signs numerous executive orders.

Donald Trump will kickstart week two by signing an executive order later today that would prohibit transgender Americans from serving in the military. | Jim LoScalzo/EPA

TRUMP’S WEEK TWO — After a dizzying first week with a whirlwind of executive actions, President Donald Trump is continuing apace today. He’ll kickstart week two by signing executive orders later today that would prohibit transgender Americans from serving in the military and eliminate diversity, equity and inclusion programs in the armed forces, NY Post’s Diana Glebova scoops. Trump is also expected to sign an order reinstating service members who were discharged for refusing to receive the Covid-19 vaccination.

Though Trump had signed orders last week eliminating federal DEI programs and revoking a Biden administration mandate that allowed trans people to serve openly, the new order on transgender people in military service would place more restrictions on pronouns and gender identity and “directly prohibit thousands of transgender service members from the military,” alleging that there are issues with their “mental and physical readiness,” per Glebova.

What’s in the order … There can be “no accommodation for anything less than resilience, strength, and the ability to withstand extraordinary physical demands,” the Post quotes a White House document previewing the order. “It can take a minimum of 12 months for an individual to complete treatments after transition surgery, which often involves the use of heavy narcotics. During this period, they are not physically capable of meeting military readiness requirements and require ongoing medical care. This is not conducive for deployment or other readiness requirements.”

Last night, newly-confirmed Defense Secretary, Pete Hegseth seemed to preemptively back Trump’s new executive orders noting in a post on X: "The President’s guidance (lawful orders) is clear: No more DEI at Dept. of Defense." In a handwritten note accompanying the post, Hegseth added: "The Pentagon will comply, immediately. No exceptions, name-changes, or delays," wrote that “those who do not comply will no longer work here."

Upon arriving at the Pentagon this morning for his first full workday in office, Hegseth confirmed there were “more executive orders coming.” He also said that, contrary to earlier statements, he would not fire Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Gen. CQ Brown. “I'm standing with him right now, I look forward to working with him,” Hegseth said, per ABC News.

Hegseth further promised to back the president’s immigration crackdown. “Whatever is needed at the border will be provided,” the Pentagon chief said. “This is a shift. It’s not the way business has been done in the past.” Hegseth added that more military forces would be deployed to the border soon. More from NYT’s Eric Schmitt

Hegseth’s comments come just a day after the Trump administration directed a multi-agency effort to arrest hundreds of migrants in cities across the U.S.

Meanwhile, after the U.S. and Columbia narrowly avoided a trade war over deportation flights yesterday, the U.S. embassy in Bogota is now telling visa applicants that their interviews are canceled “due to the Colombian government's refusal to accept repatriation [flights] of Colombian nationals from the United States,” per WSJ’s Vera Bergengruen.

Good Monday afternoon. Thanks for reading Playbook PM. Drop me a line at birvine@politico.com.

 

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AFTERNOON READ — “Can Pat Ryan Help Democrats Win Men Back?” by GQ’s Sylvie McNamara: “When men broke for Trump in 2024, Democrats turned to Pat Ryan — a veteran, dad, and two-term Congressman from New York — for answers. They might not like what he has to say.”

6 THINGS YOU NEED TO KNOW

Tulsi Gabbard

Sen. Susan Collins (R-Maine) is zeroing in on Tulsi Gabbard’s past work to repeal Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act. | Drew Angerer/Getty Images

1. COMING ATTRACTIONS: Ahead of Thursday’s Intelligence Committee hearing on Tulsi Gabbard’s nomination for director of national intelligence, questions continue to swirl over the former Hawaii representative’s viability. Key Intel committee swing vote Sen. Susan Collins (R-Maine) told The Hill’s Al Weaver that she’s zeroing in on Gabbard’s past work to repeal Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, which permits surveillance of foreign targets. Though Gabbard has attempted to walk back some of her prior criticism, Collins isn’t sold. “Her answers to the written questions were very hedged on it,” Collins told Weaver. “I know there’s been a lot of reporting that she’s changed her position. That’s not how I read her answers. I read them as, ‘I’ll take a look at the reforms and see if they meet my concerns.’”

Gabbard can’t afford to lose a single vote on the 9-8 Intel panel. And while the committee vote is typically held behind closed doors, some Senate Republicans are making a rare push to publicize the vote, Rachael Bade scoops. By opening up the vote, Trump-allied senators are hoping a public pressure campaign could sway the committee’s skeptics.

But but but … Though “panel rules allow for the release of a vote tally, they do not allow for a public roll call of how each member voted. … Opening up the committee vote, in other words, would require the secretive committee to waive its rules, and it is unclear whether [Senate Intel Chair Tom] Cotton has that power.”

A fascinating path … In a worthwhile new profile, NYT’s Elizabeth Williamson and Charles Homans detail Gabbard’s evolution, from growing up in a secretive offshoot of the Hare Krishna movement to her days as an anti-gay activist to becoming “darling of the political left” to, finally, Trumpian celebrity.

2. AI ON THE BRAIN: Some major U.S. tech companies saw their stocks tumble today due to the “sudden popularity of a Chinese artificial intelligence model called DeepSeek,” which has provoked new anxieties “about whether the massive spending on artificial intelligence ― and the specialized chips, data centers and related power infrastructure ― are justified,” WaPo’s Aaron Gregg, Shannon Najmabadi and Cat Zakrzewski report.

A fraction of the cost: DeepSeek “said training one of its latest models cost $5.6 million,” WSJ’s Mauro Orru writes — a small fraction of the mammoth cost associated with some U.S.-based AI models with similar capabilities.

The big picture: DeepSeek’s success has prompted “fears it could disrupt the global dominance of U.S. tech,” Orru writes. And, per Gregg and Najmabadi, it “suggests the Biden administration’s export controls — meant to limit China’s access to the specialized chips, like those from Nvidia, that power AI models — haven’t completely slowed rivals’ development.”

3. THE IG PURGE: Hannibal Ware, one of the 18 inspectors general fired last week by Trump, hit back at the president today in comments on MSNBC. Ware warned that the president’s round of late-night terminations constituted a “threat to democracy,” noting that the IGs are nonpartisan entities designed to root out corruption. "IGs oversee how the priorities of the administration is being conducted to make sure that there is transparency in government, and to make sure that there’s no fraud, waste and abuse, and how taxpayer funds are being expended,” Ware said, calling the firings “a threat to transparency in government." More from NBC News’ Rebecca Shabad and Annemarie Bonner

4. DEEP IN THE HEART: Texas Gov. Greg Abbott directed hundreds of state border force agents join the thousands of national guardsmen already in place on the Texas-Mexico border as Trump cracks down on border security, the Dallas Morning News’ Karen Brooks Harper reports. The 400 members of the Texas Tactical Border Force, along with C-130 aircrafts and and Chinook helicopters, were sent today from bases in Fort Worth and Houston in order “to work side-by-side with U.S. Border Patrol agents to stop illegal immigrants from entering our country and to enforce immigration laws,” Abbott said in a statement on X. The Texas governor has been pushing Congress in recent weeks to reimburse billions for his robust border security program known as “Operation Lone Star” and citing insufficient support from the Biden administration.

5. DEMS IN ARRAY: All 47 Senate Democrats signed on to cosponsor a proposed resolution condemning Trump’s pardon of violent Jan. 6 defendants. The one-line resolution reads: “the Senate disapproves of any pardons for individuals who were found guilty of assaulting Capitol Police officers.” Sen. John Fetterman (D-Pa.) — who has recently shot down rumours he was switching parties — wasn’t initially signed on to the resolution, though he added his name about an hour after it was put forward. More from Kyle Cheney 

6. ONE TO WATCH: “One of 2025’s Biggest Battles Over Abortion Rights Has Already Begun,” by NYT’s Reid Epstein: “Democratic allies of Judge Susan Crawford “say that electing her will preserve abortion rights in [Wisconsin] and lead to new congressional maps,” while Republican supporters of Judge Brad Schimel “warn that maintaining the court’s 4-to-3 liberal majority will bring about the end of a host of [GOP-enacted] laws.”

 

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TALK OF THE TOWN

Doug Emhoff will return to corporate law as a partner at Willkie Farr & Gallagher.

JD Vance’s political advisers are hopping aboard Vivek Ramaswamy’s campaign for Ohio governor.

FIRST IN PLAYBOOK — Adam Stahl has been named chief of staff at the Transportation Security Administration. He most recently was chief of staff for the corporate security office at Avangrid and is a Trump DHS and CBP alum.

MEDIA MOVE — Chris Stirewalt is now political editor at The Hill. He currently is political editor of NewsNation. Full announcement

TRANSITIONS — Robert Traynham will be president and CEO of the Faith & Politics Institute. He previously has been global spokesperson for Meta, and is a professor at Georgetown University and a Senate GOP alum. … Aaron Bennett has joined Fenway Strategies as a senior speechwriter. He most recently wrote for Tim and Gwen Walz on the Harris campaign and is a former chief speechwriter for former Speaker Nancy Pelosi. …

 … Sara Robertson is now press secretary on the House Education and Workforce Committee. She previously was comms director for Rep. Rick Crawford (R-Ark.). … Mimi Bair is now a VP at McGuireWoods Consulting. She previously was legislative director for Rep. Jodey Arrington (R-Texas).

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Send Playbookers tips to playbook@politico.com or text us at 202-556-3307. Playbook couldn’t happen without our deputy editor Zack Stanton and Playbook Daily Briefing producer Callan Tansill-Suddath.

Corrections: Friday’s Playbook PM misspelled Natasha Bertrand’s name. The Jan. 20 Playbook PM misstated the title of Lee Greenwood’s “God Bless the U.S.A,” which he sang at the Newsmax inaugural party.

 

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